Congratulations to Mr. Dufour, Cautious Optimism for Zenith

Apr 14, 2014,18:48 PM
 

I wish the absolute best to Jean-Frederic Dufour.  He's earned this opportunity and proven his range of talent. When I read an interview in which he related that he spends his every waking hour dedicated to Zenith, I realized the extent of the exertion he had made on behalf of Zenith, its employees, and us, the connoisseurs of the marque.  For all of his work restoring and re-imagining the manufacture that's given me such pleasure, he has my lasting gratitude and admiration.  I wish him the absolute best at Rolex, and I look forward to seeing the course he sets aboard his new charge.

As for Zenith, I'm fairly optimistic. If the press is to be believed, JCB hand-selected JFD to run Zenith after Thierry Nataf's long run with the company. Clearly, Jean-Claude understands that each brand has a distinct history, clientele, and appeal.  He understood that at Blancpain, and he understood the same at Hublot, but in a different paradigm. If Dufour's work at Zenith was done with JCB's blessing, we can only assume that the two men are on the same page, and nobody doubts that JFD flat-out nailed the essence of Zenith. 

If anything, the restoration begun by JFD is complete, and Zenith is in search of its next great threads of innovation. This year's Baselworld novelties were... uneven. Several concepts - some ambitious, some too timid - were on display. There was a sense of searching for a new compass. I think the management at LVMH and Zenith are an able group, and they clearly embraced the direction under JFD.

While I personally admire much about Thierry Nataf's work with Zenith, I know that view is not universal. Nevertheless, I would advise concerned devotees of Zenith not to fret about "another Nataf." Thierry Nataf was too unique to duplicate, and I mean that in the most complimentary sense. I'd imagine that no one is able, much less inclined to repeat his flamboyant experiments.

I think a gradual evolution of the basic themes of the current lineup is most likely. The Stratos is contemporary and well received, the Lightweight proves that the manufacture retains all of its technical facilities and mastery of cutting-edge engineering, and the Type 20 Grand Feu proves that the traditional fine arts of high horology are alive and revered.

Like I said, cautiously optimistic ;-)

Best,

Tim
This message has been edited by Tim_M on 2014-04-14 19:00:05


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BREAKING NEWS: Jean-Frédéric Dufour to leave Zenith, goes to Rolex (update soon!)!!

 
 By: Ornatus-Mundi : April 14th, 2014-07:06
It was communicated just minutes ago to the employees: Jean-Frédéric Dufour, current CEO, is going to leave Zenith in order to accept a new post as Directeur Générale at Rolex. What is certainly the highest accolade a CEO can obtain in this industry, I ma...  

indeed

 
 By: Bruno.M1 : April 14th, 2014-07:13
That's a great move for Mr Dufour ! Congratulations I only hope Zeniths gets a CEO it deserves.... we had a great one and we still need a great one

What !?

 
 By: Spellbound : April 14th, 2014-07:19
Hope they find a suitable replacement. No disrespect, but if JCB decides not to replace, but run the show himself, I can't say I would be comfortable. JFD has done a tremendous job, not only by increasing sales, but also earning back the respect for the m... 

I am not sure if JCB would be a wrong choice ...

 
 By: Marcus Hanke : April 14th, 2014-10:47
... I think he very well knows how to handle a company tradition, but to also make it fit for the challenges of a modern business. Not that I have the impression that a lot has to be changed of the course steered by Dufour. Marcus

No doubt

 
 By: Spellbound : April 14th, 2014-11:05
I don't think anyone can doubt JCB's business acumen. I am more concerned that we might find Zenith signing on brand ambassadors left right and center, which will perhaps reflect in higher prices. They have already signed on some basketball player, and I ... 

Well, JCB did NOT do this with Blancpain...

 
 By: Ornatus-Mundi : April 14th, 2014-11:31
plus, he is a 'certified' company transformation specialist, which I think is much more to his liking than running a perfectly sailing ship (LVMH as a whole)… We will see! Cheers, Magnus

That's sad news for us Zenith fans

 
 By: AnthonyTsai : April 14th, 2014-08:07
He did a great job turning around Zenith IMO. He will be missed! And I wish him well in his new position at Rolex! Cheers, Anthony

If this was posted 2 weeks ago :)

 
 By: Ares501 - Mr Green : April 14th, 2014-11:59
Much more interested to see direction Rolex will take Interesting times ahead for both brands Best D

Congratulations to Mr. Dufour, Cautious Optimism for Zenith

 
 By: Tim_M : April 14th, 2014-18:48
I wish the absolute best to Jean-Frederic Dufour. He's earned this opportunity and proven his range of talent. When I read an interview in which he related that he spends his every waking hour dedicated to Zenith, I realized the extent of the exertion he ... 

Excellent observations

 
 By: Spellbound : April 14th, 2014-19:28
And very eloquently put. I wish I had half the writing skills you have. And agree with you, enough of the Thierry Nataf bashing already ! The man was a visionary designer, and very much responsible for putting Zenith back on the map. Dean

An excellent assessment, Tim, and I like...

 
 By: Ornatus-Mundi : April 15th, 2014-13:27
the way how you put the respective achievements of Mr Nataf and Mr Dufour in perspective. I am myself not sure how I should value Thierry Nataf's period. He was the right man to reinvigorate the company, without him there would be no Christof Colomb Hurri... 

Agreed: History and innovation require a balance

 
 By: Tim_M : April 16th, 2014-04:48
Magnus, Thank you for the kind words. You captured the essential strengths and weaknesses of the Nataf approach. He was an iconoclast and bold, but there was no counter-weight to add a competing voice within the design process. Without a strong internal a...